2023 has been yet another dispiriting year for most of the
children in custody in Young Offender Institutions (YOI) and the one remaining Secure
Training Centre (STC). Prison Inspector Charlie Taylor reported
that “many spend most of their sentence locked up alone in their cell with very
little human contact. Despite employing hundreds of staff and dozens of
managers, most sites are unable to deliver one meaningful conversation with
each child a week”.
In April he found “a complete breakdown of behaviour
management” at Cookham
Wood YOI to the point where there was
widespread weapon making and six months later reported that systems for safeguarding
children at Werrington
YOI were in disarray. Over the last 12 months, almost 900
safeguarding referrals have been made about children in custody whose wellbeing
has been a cause of concern.
Parc YOI in South Wales has been an exception to this dismal
picture and Oakhill STC has seen “a
tangible change in culture, with children being recognised and treated as
children first and foremost”. But the number
of incidents of violence and aggression at Oakhill was still impacting on
children’s day-to-day experiences.
Thanks to parliamentary questions by Labour’s energetic new
Shadow Minister Janet Daby, we have learned that almost
18% of staff in the youth custody estate have left over the last year– in 2010
the rate was 5%. This year, the Minister
for Prisons, Parole and Probation made only three site visits to youth
secure establishments; the Secretary of
State for Justice and the Chief Executive of HMPPS did not make any at all.
But what about Secure Childrens Homes (SCH) , the third type
of closed setting in which young people on remand and under sentence can be
held?
As has usually been the case, inspection reports have mostly
been good. This year Ofsted found the overall experience of children to be inadequate in one SCH
largely because of the inappropriate use of restraint; and requiring improvement in
another where all new staff were not always subject to the full range of pre-employment
checks such as references. Despite these problems, given the generally more positive
performance of SCH’s it's surprising that the number of children placed by the Youth
Custody Service (YCS) in secure homes has decreased so much in recent years from 146
on 31 March 2012 to 56 this year. This
is despite the YCS commissioning 101 places. Ms Daby should explore why this is the case.
In the spring, after countless delays, the secure estate
should be augmented by the 49 place Secure School. The prisons minister told Ms
Daby that Secure Schools are a new, innovative approach, and “it
is important that we take the time to get it right”. The government has certainly been doing that as the commitment
to develop two Schools was made more than seven years ago.
There’s a good deal of uncertainty about the detail of what Oasis Restore will provide at the Medway
site and how much it will cost. HMPPS boss Amy
Rees told MPs in March that their funding agreement would be published by
Oasis this Autumn, but there is only a draft on their website.
Local authorities may be interested to know how much they
will be charged when a child is detained on remand there. This year, (for the
first time I think), the
cost of a night in a Secure Training Centre (£838) exceeded that in a Secure
Childrens Home (£834).
Another issue to probe in the New Year.
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